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1.
Microsc Microanal ; 29(5): 1755-1763, 2023 09 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37639376

ABSTRACT

Physical properties and chemical composition are fundamentally defining and interconnected surface characteristics. However, few techniques are able to capture both in a correlative fashion at the same sample location and orientation. This is especially important for complex materials such as dentin, which is an inner tooth structure and is a heterogeneous, composite inorganic-organic material with open channels (tubules) that extend toward the tooth pulp. Here, a combined microscope system consisting of an atomic force microscope and a confocal Raman spectrometer was used to study the correlative physical and chemical properties of human dentin. The local hardness of dentin was highly correlated with the Raman signal ratio of inorganic to organic material, and this was enhanced in the peritubular regions of dentin. When the samples were etched with citric acid, Young's modulus, hardness, and inorganic-to-organic material ratio decreased significantly, collagen fibrils on the surface were exposed, the peritubular regions were removed, and the tubule diameters increased. Thus, the combined atomic force microscopy (AFM)-Raman approach allows for comprehensive and correlative physical-chemical analysis of material surfaces and will be invaluable for evaluating oral therapeutic strategies.


Subject(s)
Dentin , Spectrum Analysis, Raman , Humans , Microscopy, Atomic Force , Elastic Modulus , Hardness
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(18): e2221040120, 2023 05 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37098071

ABSTRACT

Wound healing through reepithelialization of gaps is of profound importance to the medical community. One critical mechanism identified by researchers for closing non-cell-adhesive gaps is the accumulation of actin cables around concave edges and the resulting purse-string constriction. However, the studies to date have not separated the gap-edge curvature effect from the gap size effect. Here, we fabricate micropatterned hydrogel substrates with long, straight, and wavy non-cell-adhesive stripes of different gap widths to investigate the stripe edge curvature and stripe width effects on the reepithelialization of Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells. Our results show that MDCK cell reepithelization is closely regulated by the gap geometry and may occur through different pathways. In addition to purse-string contraction, we identify gap bridging either via cell protrusion or by lamellipodium extension as critical cellular and molecular mechanisms for wavy gap closure. Cell migration in the direction perpendicular to wound front, sufficiently small gap size to allow bridging, and sufficiently high negative curvature at cell bridges for actin cable constriction are necessary/sufficient conditions for gap closure. Our experiments demonstrate that straight stripes rarely induce cell migration perpendicular to wound front, but wavy stripes do; cell protrusion and lamellipodia extension can help establish bridges over gaps of about five times the cell size, but not significantly beyond. Such discoveries deepen our understanding of mechanobiology of cell responses to curvature and help guide development of biophysical strategies for tissue repair, plastic surgery, and better wound management.


Subject(s)
Actins , Wound Healing , Animals , Dogs , Actins/physiology , Madin Darby Canine Kidney Cells , Cell Movement/physiology , Wound Healing/physiology
3.
Acta Biomater ; 142: 149-159, 2022 04 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35124266

ABSTRACT

The propensity of cells to align in particular directions is relevant to a number of areas, including tissue engineering and biohybrid robotics. Cell alignment is modulated through various extracellular conditions including surface topographies, mechanical cues from cell-matrix interactions, and cell-cell interactions. Understanding of these conditions provides guidance for desirable cellular structure constructions. In this study, we examine the roles of surface topographies and cell-cell interactions in inducing cell alignment. We employed wavy surface topographies at the nanometer scale as a model extracellular environment for cell culture. The results show that, within a certain range of wavelengths and amplitudes of the surface topographies, cell alignment is dependent on cell confluency. This dependence on both topology and confluency suggests interplay between cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions in inducing cell alignment. Images of sparsely distributed and confluent cells also demonstrated clear differences in the structures of their focal adhesion complexes. To understand this effect, we introduced anti-N-cadherin to cell culture to inhibit cell-cell interactions. The results show that, when anti-N-cadherin was applied, cells on wavy surfaces required greater confluency to achieve the same alignment compared to that in the absence of anti-N-cadherin. The understanding of the cell alignment mechanisms will be important in numerous potential applications such as scaffold design, tissue repair, and development of biohybrid robotic systems. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Cell alignment plays a critical role in numerous biological functions. Advances in tissue engineering utilizes cell alignment to restore, maintain, or even replace different types of biological tissues. The clinical impact that tissue engineering has made is facilitated by advancements in the understanding of interactions between scaffolds, biological factors, and cells. This work further elucidates the role of cell-cell interactions in promoting the organization of biological tissues.


Subject(s)
Cell Culture Techniques , Tissue Engineering , Cell Adhesion , Cell Communication , Tissue Engineering/methods , Tissue Scaffolds/chemistry
4.
Biomaterials ; 275: 120866, 2021 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34044258

ABSTRACT

Cancer cells differ from normal cells in several important features like anchorage independence, Warburg effect and mechanosensing. Further, in recent studies, they respond aberrantly to external mechanical distortion. Consistent with altered mechano-responsiveness, we find that cyclic stretching of tumor cells from many different tissues reduces growth rate and causes apoptosis on soft surfaces. Surprisingly, normal cells behave similarly when transformed by depletion of the rigidity sensor protein (Tropomyosin 2.1). Restoration of rigidity sensing in tumor cells promotes rigidity dependent mechanical behavior, i.e. cyclic stretching enhances growth and reduces apoptosis on soft surfaces. The mechanism of mechanical apoptosis (mechanoptosis) of transformed cells involves calcium influx through the mechanosensitive channel, Piezo1 that activates calpain 2 dependent apoptosis through the BAX molecule and subsequent mitochondrial activation of caspase 3 on both fibronetin and collagen matrices. Thus, it is possible to selectively kill tumor cells by mechanical perturbations, while stimulating the growth of normal cells.


Subject(s)
Apoptosis , Calcium , Stress, Mechanical , Collagen , Cytoskeletal Proteins , Humans , Tumor Cells, Cultured
5.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 2226, 2021 04 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33850145

ABSTRACT

At the basis of cell shape and behavior, the organization of actomyosin and its ability to generate forces are widely studied. However, the precise regulation of this contractile network in space and time is unclear. Here, we study the role of the epithelial-specific protein EpCAM, a contractility modulator, in cell shape and motility. We show that EpCAM is required for stress fiber generation and front-rear polarity acquisition at the single cell level. In fact, EpCAM participates in the remodeling of a transient zone of active RhoA at the cortex of spreading epithelial cells. EpCAM and RhoA route together through the Rab35/EHD1 fast recycling pathway. This endosomal pathway spatially organizes GTP-RhoA to fine tune the activity of actomyosin resulting in polarized cell shape and development of intracellular stiffness and traction forces. Impairment of GTP-RhoA endosomal trafficking either by silencing EpCAM or by expressing Rab35/EHD1 mutants prevents proper myosin-II activity, stress fiber formation and ultimately cell polarization. Collectively, this work shows that the coupling between co-trafficking of EpCAM and RhoA, and actomyosin rearrangement is pivotal for cell spreading, and advances our understanding of how biochemical and mechanical properties promote cell plasticity.


Subject(s)
Endosomes/metabolism , Epithelial Cell Adhesion Molecule/metabolism , Epithelial Cells/metabolism , rhoA GTP-Binding Protein/metabolism , Actomyosin/metabolism , Caco-2 Cells , Cell Movement/physiology , Cell Polarity , Cell Shape , HeLa Cells , Humans , Myosin Type II/metabolism , Stress Fibers/metabolism
6.
Front Microbiol ; 11: 1344, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32714295

ABSTRACT

Biophotovoltaic devices utilize photosynthetic organisms such as the model cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 (Synechocystis) to generate current for power or hydrogen production from light. These devices have been improved by both architecture engineering and genetic engineering of the phototrophic organism. However, genetic approaches are limited by lack of understanding of cellular mechanisms of electron transfer from internal metabolism to the cell exterior. Type IV pili have been implicated in extracellular electron transfer (EET) in some species of heterotrophic bacteria. Furthermore, conductive cell surface filaments have been reported for cyanobacteria, including Synechocystis. However, it remains unclear whether these filaments are type IV pili and whether they are involved in EET. Herein, a mediatorless electrochemical setup is used to compare the electrogenic output of wild-type Synechocystis to that of a ΔpilD mutant that cannot produce type IV pili. No differences in photocurrent, i.e., current in response to illumination, are detectable. Furthermore, measurements of individual pili using conductive atomic force microscopy indicate these structures are not conductive. These results suggest that pili are not required for EET by Synechocystis, supporting a role for shuttling of electrons via soluble redox mediators or direct interactions between the cell surface and extracellular substrates.

7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(23): 12817-12825, 2020 06 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32444491

ABSTRACT

Morphogenesis, tumor formation, and wound healing are regulated by tissue rigidity. Focal adhesion behavior is locally regulated by stiffness; however, how cells globally adapt, detect, and respond to rigidity remains unknown. Here, we studied the interplay between the rheological properties of the cytoskeleton and matrix rigidity. We seeded fibroblasts onto flexible microfabricated pillar arrays with varying stiffness and simultaneously measured the cytoskeleton organization, traction forces, and cell-rigidity responses at both the adhesion and cell scale. Cells adopted a rigidity-dependent phenotype whereby the actin cytoskeleton polarized on stiff substrates but not on soft. We further showed a crucial role of active and passive cross-linkers in rigidity-sensing responses. By reducing myosin II activity or knocking down α-actinin, we found that both promoted cell polarization on soft substrates, whereas α-actinin overexpression prevented polarization on stiff substrates. Atomic force microscopy indentation experiments showed that this polarization response correlated with cell stiffness, whereby cell stiffness decreased when active or passive cross-linking was reduced and softer cells polarized on softer matrices. Theoretical modeling of the actin network as an active gel suggests that adaptation to matrix rigidity is controlled by internal mechanical properties of the cytoskeleton and puts forward a universal scaling between nematic order of the actin cytoskeleton and the substrate-to-cell elastic modulus ratio. Altogether, our study demonstrates the implication of cell-scale mechanosensing through the internal stress within the actomyosin cytoskeleton and its coupling with local rigidity sensing at focal adhesions in the regulation of cell shape changes and polarity.


Subject(s)
Cytoskeleton/metabolism , Elastic Modulus , Mechanotransduction, Cellular , Tissue Scaffolds/chemistry , Actinin/metabolism , Cell Polarity , Cross-Linking Reagents/chemistry , Cytoskeleton/ultrastructure , Fibroblasts/metabolism , Humans , Models, Theoretical , Myosins/metabolism
8.
Soft Matter ; 16(7): 1825-1839, 2020 Feb 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31970382

ABSTRACT

The physical cues from the extracellular environment mediates cell signaling spatially and temporally. Cells respond to physical cues from their environment in a non-monotonic fashion. Despite our understanding of the role of substrate rigidity on single cell migration, how cells respond collectively to increasing extracellular matrix stiffness is not well established. Here we patterned multicellular epithelial Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) islands on polyacrylamide gels of varying stiffness and studied their expansion. Our findings show that the MDCK islands expanded faster with increasing stiffness only up to an optimum stiffness, over which the expansion plateaued. We then focused on the expansion of the front of the assemblies and the formation of leader cells. We observed cell front destabilization only above substrate stiffness of a few kPa. The extension of multicellular finger-like structures at the edges of the colonies for intermediate and high stiffnesses from 6 to 60 kPa responded to higher substrate stiffness by increasing focal adhesion areas and actin cable assembly. Additionally, the number of leader cells at the finger-like protrusions increased with stiffness in correlation with an increase of the area of these multicellular protrusions. Consequently, the force profile along the epithelial fingers in the parallel and transverse directions of migration showed an unexpected relationship leading to a global force decrease with the increase of stiffness. Taken together, our findings show that epithelial cell colonies respond to substrate stiffness but in a non-trivial manner that may be of importance to understand morphogenesis and collective cell invasion during tumour progression.


Subject(s)
Carcinogenesis/genetics , Cell Movement/genetics , Focal Adhesions/genetics , Neoplasms/genetics , Actins/chemistry , Actins/genetics , Animals , Dogs , Epithelial Cells/metabolism , Humans , Madin Darby Canine Kidney Cells , Neoplasm Invasiveness/genetics , Neoplasm Invasiveness/pathology , Neoplasms/pathology , Substrate Specificity
9.
Mol Biol Cell ; 30(16): 2025-2036, 2019 07 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31216217

ABSTRACT

Contractile arrays of actin and myosin II filaments drive many essential processes in nonmuscle cells, including migration and adhesion. Sequential organization of actin and myosin along one dimension is followed by expansion into a two-dimensional network of parallel actomyosin fibers, in which myosin filaments are aligned to form stacks. The process of stack formation has been studied in detail. However, factors that oppose myosin stack formation have not yet been described. Here, we show that tropomyosins act as negative regulators of myosin stack formation. Knockdown of any or all tropomyosin isoforms in rat embryonic fibroblasts resulted in longer and more numerous myosin stacks and a highly ordered actomyosin organization. The molecular basis for this, we found, is the competition between tropomyosin and alpha-actinin for binding actin. Surprisingly, excessive order in the actomyosin network resulted in smaller focal adhesions, lower tension within the network, and smaller traction forces. Conversely, disordered actomyosin bundles induced by alpha-actinin knockdown led to higher than normal tension and traction forces. Thus, tropomyosin acts as a check on alpha-actinin to achieve intermediate levels of myosin stacks matching the force requirements of the cell.


Subject(s)
Actinin/metabolism , Actomyosin/metabolism , Muscle Contraction , Tropomyosin/metabolism , Actin Cytoskeleton/metabolism , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Fibroblasts/metabolism , Focal Adhesions/metabolism , Models, Biological , Myosin Type II/metabolism , Rats , Stress Fibers/metabolism
10.
Phys Rev E ; 99(1-1): 012412, 2019 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30780372

ABSTRACT

A general trait of living cells is their ability to exert contractile stresses on their surroundings and thus respond to substrate rigidity. At the cellular scale, this response affects cell shape, polarity, and ultimately migration. The regulation of cell shape together with rigidity sensing remains largely unknown. In this article we show that both substrate rigidity and cell shape contribute to drive actin organization and cell polarity. Increasing substrate rigidity affects bulk properties of the actin cytoskeleton by favoring long-lived actin stress fibers with increased nematic interactions, whereas cell shape imposes a local alignment of actin fibers at the cell periphery.


Subject(s)
Actins/metabolism , Cell Polarity , Cell Shape , Mechanical Phenomena , Models, Biological , Biomechanical Phenomena , Cell Adhesion
11.
Soft Matter ; 15(8): 1776-1784, 2019 Feb 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30720830

ABSTRACT

Atomic force microscopy (AFM) is becoming an increasingly popular method for studying cell mechanics, however the existing analysis tools for determining the elastic modulus from indentation experiments are unable to quantitatively account for mechanical heterogeneity commonly found in biological samples. In this work, we numerically calculated force-indentation curves onto two-layered elastic materials using an analytic model. We found that the effect of the underlying substrate can be quantitatively predicted by the mismatch in elastic moduli and the homogeneous-case contact radius relative to the layer height for all tested probe geometries. The effect is analogous to one-dimensional Hookean springs in series and was phenomenologically modeled to obtain an approximate closed-form equation for the indentation force onto a two-layered elastic material which is accurate for up to two orders of magnitude mismatch in Young's modulus when the contact radius is less than the layer height. We performed finite element analysis simulations to verify the model and AFM microindentation experiments and macroindentation experiments to demonstrate its ability to deconvolute the Young's modulus of each layer. The model can be broadly used to quantify and serve as a guideline for designing and interpreting indentation experiments into mechanically heterogeneous samples.


Subject(s)
Elastic Modulus , Materials Testing , Dimethylpolysiloxanes , Finite Element Analysis
12.
Nat Methods ; 15(7): 491-498, 2018 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29915189

ABSTRACT

The mechanical properties of cells influence their cellular and subcellular functions, including cell adhesion, migration, polarization, and differentiation, as well as organelle organization and trafficking inside the cytoplasm. Yet reported values of cell stiffness and viscosity vary substantially, which suggests differences in how the results of different methods are obtained or analyzed by different groups. To address this issue and illustrate the complementarity of certain approaches, here we present, analyze, and critically compare measurements obtained by means of some of the most widely used methods for cell mechanics: atomic force microscopy, magnetic twisting cytometry, particle-tracking microrheology, parallel-plate rheometry, cell monolayer rheology, and optical stretching. These measurements highlight how elastic and viscous moduli of MCF-7 breast cancer cells can vary 1,000-fold and 100-fold, respectively. We discuss the sources of these variations, including the level of applied mechanical stress, the rate of deformation, the geometry of the probe, the location probed in the cell, and the extracellular microenvironment.


Subject(s)
Single-Cell Analysis/methods , Biomechanical Phenomena , Cell Adhesion , Cell Movement , Humans , Lab-On-A-Chip Devices , MCF-7 Cells , Stress, Mechanical
13.
Nano Lett ; 17(1): 399-406, 2017 01 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27990827

ABSTRACT

Focal adhesions (FAs) are important mediators of cell-substrate interactions. One of their key functions is the transmission of forces between the intracellular acto-myosin network and the substrate. However, the relationships between cell traction forces, FA architecture, and molecular forces within FAs are poorly understood. Here, by combining Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based molecular force biosensors with micropillar-based traction force sensors and high-resolution fluorescence microscopy, we simultaneously map molecular tension across vinculin, a key protein in FAs, and traction forces at FAs. Our results reveal strong spatiotemporal correlations between vinculin tension and cell traction forces at FAs throughout a wide range of substrate stiffnesses. Furthermore, we find that molecular tension within individual FAs follows a biphasic distribution from the proximal (toward the cell nucleus) to distal end (toward the cell edge). Using super-resolution imaging, we show that such a distribution relates to that of FA proteins. On the basis of our experimental data, we propose a model in which FA dynamics results from tension changes along the FAs.

14.
Cell Adh Migr ; 10(5): 554-567, 2016 09 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27050660

ABSTRACT

Many physiological and pathological processes involve tissue cells sensing the rigidity of their environment. In general, tissue cells have been shown to react to the stiffness of their environment by regulating their level of contractility, and in turn applying traction forces on their environment to probe it. This mechanosensitive process can direct early cell adhesion, cell migration and even cell differentiation. These processes require the integration of signals over time and multiple length scales. Multiple strategies have been developed to understand force- and rigidity-sensing mechanisms and much effort has been concentrated on the study of cell adhesion complexes, such as focal adhesions, and cell cytoskeletons. Here, we review the major biophysical methods used for measuring cell-traction forces as well as the mechanosensitive processes that drive cellular responses to matrix rigidity on 2-dimensional substrates.


Subject(s)
Actin Cytoskeleton/metabolism , Focal Adhesions/metabolism , Mechanotransduction, Cellular , Single-Cell Analysis/methods , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Humans , Models, Biological
15.
Sci Rep ; 6: 19686, 2016 Jan 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26813872

ABSTRACT

Mechanical interactions between cells and their microenvironment dictate cell phenotype and behavior, calling for cell mechanics measurements in three-dimensional (3D) extracellular matrices (ECM). Here we describe a novel technique for quantitative mechanical characterization of soft, heterogeneous samples in 3D. The technique is based on the integration of atomic force microscopy (AFM) based deep indentation, confocal fluorescence microscopy, finite element (FE) simulations and analytical modeling. With this method, the force response of a cell embedded in 3D ECM can be decoupled from that of its surroundings, enabling quantitative determination of the elastic properties of both the cell and the matrix. We applied the technique to the quantification of the elastic properties of metastatic breast adenocarcinoma cells invading into collagen hydrogels. We found that actively invading and fully embedded cells are significantly stiffer than cells remaining on top of the collagen, a clear example of phenotypical change in response to the 3D environment. Treatment with Rho-associated protein kinase (ROCK) inhibitor significantly reduces this stiffening, indicating that actomyosin contractility plays a major role in the initial steps of metastatic invasion.


Subject(s)
Collagen Type I/metabolism , Extracellular Matrix/metabolism , Neoplasms/metabolism , Neoplasms/pathology , Algorithms , Cell Line, Tumor , Elastic Modulus , Humans , Mechanical Phenomena , Microscopy, Atomic Force , Microscopy, Confocal , Models, Theoretical , Neoplasm Metastasis
16.
Langmuir ; 26(8): 5942-50, 2010 Apr 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20205416

ABSTRACT

Quantum mechanical (QM) calculations, classical grand canonical Monte Carlo (GCMC) simulations, and classical molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are performed to test the effect of charge distribution on hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine (RDX) adsorption and diffusion in IRMOF-10. Several different methods for mapping QM electron distributions onto atomic point charges are explored, including the electrostatic potential (ESP) method, Mulliken population analysis, Lowdin population analysis, and natural bond orbital analysis. Classical GCMC and MD simulations of RDX in IRMOF-10 are performed using 15 combinations of charge sources of RDX and IRMOF-10. As the charge distributions vary, interaction potential energies, the adsorption loading, and the self-diffusivities are significantly different. None of the 15 combinations are able to quantitatively capture the dependence of the energy of adsorption on local configuration of RDX as observed in the QM calculations. We observe changes in the charge distributions of RDX and IRMOF-10 with the introduction of an RDX molecule into the cage. We also observe a large dispersion contribution to the interaction energy from QM calculations that is not reproduced in the classical simulations, indicating that the source of discrepancy may not lie exclusively with the assignment of charges.

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